From c0b89ac5bfb90835ef01573267020e42d4fe070c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?J=C3=B6rg=20Frings-F=C3=BCrst?= Date: Sun, 23 Aug 2015 12:17:05 +0200 Subject: Imported Upstream version 1.8.0 --- jpeg/jmemnobs.c | 109 -------------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 109 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 jpeg/jmemnobs.c (limited to 'jpeg/jmemnobs.c') diff --git a/jpeg/jmemnobs.c b/jpeg/jmemnobs.c deleted file mode 100644 index eb8c337..0000000 --- a/jpeg/jmemnobs.c +++ /dev/null @@ -1,109 +0,0 @@ -/* - * jmemnobs.c - * - * Copyright (C) 1992-1996, Thomas G. Lane. - * This file is part of the Independent JPEG Group's software. - * For conditions of distribution and use, see the accompanying README file. - * - * This file provides a really simple implementation of the system- - * dependent portion of the JPEG memory manager. This implementation - * assumes that no backing-store files are needed: all required space - * can be obtained from malloc(). - * This is very portable in the sense that it'll compile on almost anything, - * but you'd better have lots of main memory (or virtual memory) if you want - * to process big images. - * Note that the max_memory_to_use option is ignored by this implementation. - */ - -#define JPEG_INTERNALS -#include "jinclude.h" -#include "jpeglib.h" -#include "jmemsys.h" /* import the system-dependent declarations */ - -#ifndef HAVE_STDLIB_H /* should declare malloc(),free() */ -extern void * malloc JPP((size_t size)); -extern void free JPP((void *ptr)); -#endif - - -/* - * Memory allocation and freeing are controlled by the regular library - * routines malloc() and free(). - */ - -GLOBAL(void *) -jpeg_get_small (j_common_ptr cinfo, size_t sizeofobject) -{ - return (void *) malloc(sizeofobject); -} - -GLOBAL(void) -jpeg_free_small (j_common_ptr cinfo, void * object, size_t sizeofobject) -{ - free(object); -} - - -/* - * "Large" objects are treated the same as "small" ones. - * NB: although we include FAR keywords in the routine declarations, - * this file won't actually work in 80x86 small/medium model; at least, - * you probably won't be able to process useful-size images in only 64KB. - */ - -GLOBAL(void FAR *) -jpeg_get_large (j_common_ptr cinfo, size_t sizeofobject) -{ - return (void FAR *) malloc(sizeofobject); -} - -GLOBAL(void) -jpeg_free_large (j_common_ptr cinfo, void FAR * object, size_t sizeofobject) -{ - free(object); -} - - -/* - * This routine computes the total memory space available for allocation. - * Here we always say, "we got all you want bud!" - */ - -GLOBAL(long) -jpeg_mem_available (j_common_ptr cinfo, long min_bytes_needed, - long max_bytes_needed, long already_allocated) -{ - return max_bytes_needed; -} - - -/* - * Backing store (temporary file) management. - * Since jpeg_mem_available always promised the moon, - * this should never be called and we can just error out. - */ - -GLOBAL(void) -jpeg_open_backing_store (j_common_ptr cinfo, backing_store_ptr info, - long total_bytes_needed) -{ - ERREXIT(cinfo, JERR_NO_BACKING_STORE); -} - - -/* - * These routines take care of any system-dependent initialization and - * cleanup required. Here, there isn't any. - */ - -GLOBAL(long) -jpeg_mem_init (j_common_ptr cinfo) -{ - return 0; /* just set max_memory_to_use to 0 */ -} - -GLOBAL(void) -jpeg_mem_term (j_common_ptr cinfo) -{ - /* no work */ -} -- cgit v1.2.3